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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Bank of England deputy governor pays tribute to North East business resilience

Deputy governor Sarah Breeden met a number of businesses and charity groups in the region

Sarah Breeden, Deputy Governor for Financial Stability(Image: © 2024 PA Media, All Rights Reserved)

The deputy governor of the Bank of England has met businesses and voluntary groups around the North East in a bid to get a flavour of the regional economy in the run-up to key decisions at the Bank.

Sarah Breeden, the Bank’s deputy governor for financial stability, is a member of the monetary policy committee that sets interest rates in a bid to keep inflation at 2%. The Bank is under pressure in some quarters to reduce rates but inflation is currently above Government targets at 3.8%, making rate cuts less likely.

Ms Breeden held a series of meetings in Newcastle, Gateshead and Sunderland, speaking to young entrepreneurs, business leaders and voluntary groups. She said it was “really important that we understand the experience of the economy broadly not just the economy of London and the South East”.

She paid tribute to the entrepreneurial spirit of people she had met in the region but acknowledged that higher inflation was putting pressure on businesses and it was important that the Bank brought that down.

She said: “It’s always the concern that uncertainty leads to a chilling effect on investment and hiring of new staff. That’s something that we’ve been focussed on in our conversations with businesses. I recognise that story.

“What we can do is, three things: we can make sure monetary policy delivers low and stable inflation. We can make sure that interest rates are set at the right level to support economy activity once inflation is headed to 2%. The third thing we can do is make sure the banks are there and the financial system is there to support businesses when they want to invest.”

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey with Beamish CEO Rhiannon Hiles and chair Chris Loughran(Image: Beamish)

Ms Breeden, whose main role at the Bank includes ensuring stability in the banking and financial sectors, said moves by the Government to relax some of the regulations brought in after the 2008 could be positive.

She said: “It’s really important that we all remember the damage that financial crises leave on the real economy. It’s the million extra people who were unemployed after the global financial crisis. It’s the impact on the public finances in having to bail out the banks. Those were real costs for the economy and we mustn’t forget that.